223 - Duties and powers of the superintendent of state police and of members of the state police.

* § 223. Duties  and  powers of the superintendent of state police and  of members of the  state  police.  1.  It  shall  be  the  duty  of  the  superintendent of the state police and of members of the state police to  prevent  and  detect  crime  and apprehend criminals. They shall also be  subject to the call of the governor and are empowered to co-operate with  any other department of the state or with local authorities. They  shall  have  power  to  arrest,  without  a  warrant,  any person committing or  attempting to commit within their presence or view a breach of the peace  or other violation of law, to serve and execute warrants  of  arrest  or  search  issued  by  proper authority and to exercise all other powers of  police officers of the state of New York. Any such  warrants  issued  by  any  magistrate  of the state may be executed by them in any part of the  state according to the tenor thereof without indorsement. But they shall  not exercise their powers within the limits  of  any  city  to  suppress  rioting  and  disorder  except  by direction of the governor or upon the  request of the mayor of the city with the approval of the governor.  Any  member  of  the  rank of sergeant or above may take pre-arraignment bail  from any defendant in  the  amounts  and  under  the  circumstances  and  conditions that police may take bail.    2.  The  superintendent  may,  by  written  order,  designate a police  officer, as  defined  in  paragraph  (b),  (c)  or  (d)  of  subdivision  thirty-four  of  section  1.20  of the criminal procedure law, to assist  members of the state police in order to  more  effectively  address  the  detection  of  crime  and apprehension of criminals within the state and  its localities.  Police officers so designated, while  actively  working  in  conjunction  with  members of the state police either directly or as  part of a specific task force, shall be paid by and remain employees  of  their  particular  county, city, town or village, but shall for purposes  of the criminal procedure law, have their geographic area of  employment  deemed to be New York state.    * NB Effective until September 1, 2011    * § 223. Duties  and  powers of the superintendent of state police and  of  members  of  the  state  police.  It  shall  be  the  duty  of   the  superintendent of the state police and of members of the state police to  prevent  and  detect  crime  and apprehend criminals. They shall also be  subject to the call of the governor and are empowered to co-operate with  any other department of the state or with local authorities. They  shall  have  power  to  arrest,  without  a  warrant,  any person committing or  attempting to commit within their presence or view a breach of the peace  or other violation of law, to serve and execute warrants  of  arrest  or  search  issued  by  proper authority and to exercise all other powers of  police officers of the state of New York. Any such  warrants  issued  by  any  magistrate  of the state may be executed by them in any part of the  state according to the tenor thereof without indorsement. But they shall  not exercise their powers within the limits  of  any  city  to  suppress  rioting  and  disorder  except  by direction of the governor or upon the  request of the mayor of the city with the approval of the governor.  Any  member  of  the  rank of sergeant or above may take pre-arraignment bail  from any defendant in  the  amounts  and  under  the  circumstances  and  conditions that police may take bail.    * NB Effective September 1, 2011